UPANISHAD VAHINI (Essence of Vedic Knowledge)

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UPANISHAD VAHINI (Essence of Vedic Knowledge) by BHAGAWAN SRI SATHYA SAI BABA PRASANTHI NILAYAM SRI SATHYA SAI BOOKS AND PUBLICATIONS TRUST PRASANTHI NILAYAM, ANANTAPUR DISTRICT. ANDHRA PRADESH - 515 134. INDIA Phone: 87375 STD: 08555 ISD: 91-8555 Fax: 87236 Grams: BOOKTRUST Sri Sathya Sai Books & Publications Trust Prasanthi Nilayam P.O. 515 134, Anantapur District, A.P. (India.). All Rights Reserved The copyright and the rights of translation in any language are reserved by the Publishers. No part, passage, text or photograph or Artwork of this book should be reproduced, transmitted or utilised, in original language or by translation, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photo copying, recording or by any information, storage and retrieval system except with the express and prior permission, in writing from the Convener, Sri Sathya Sai Books & Publications Trust, Prasanthi Nilayam (Andhra Pradesh) India - Pin Code 515 134, except for brief passages quoted in book review. This book can be exported from India only by the Publishers - Sri Sathya Sai Books and Publications Trust, Prasanthi Nilayam (India). International Standard Book Number 81-7208-299-1 First Enlarged Edition: June 2002 Price Rs. 20.00 Published by: The Convener, Sri Sathya Sai Books & Publications Trust Prasanthi Nilayam, India - Pincode 515 134 STD: 08555 ISD: 91-8555 Grams: BOOKTRUST Telephone: 87375 Fax: 87236 Printed at: DEAR READER! Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba has come among men and is providing spiritual sustenance and guidance, in order to re-establish Truth, Justice, Peace and Love as the mainspring of individual, social and national life. He is using for this great task ancient and modern instruments, Sanathana Dharma and science. His writings, discourses and conversations which correct, communicate and convince are full of statements and commentaries on the discoveries of physical and metaphysical sciences. This book which gives, in English, His articles (first published in Telugu in the Sanathana Sarathi) on the Ten Upanishads (invaluable textbooks on spiritual discipline and on the glorious fruit of spiritual adventure) will reveal to you the vast limitless mercy which impels Him to save us from trivialities and prompts Him to guide us along, until we reach the Goal of Life. Making us tread the path discovered by the Sages of the past, inducing us to revere their light and their Message, illumining in us the flame of knowledge which dispels delusion—that is what Bhagawan, with His Supreme Love, does for us in this book. Let us read it with care, recapitulate it with earnestness in the silence of our hearts and practise it with humility and faith in every turn of thought, in every tilt of tongue and in every digit of deed. N. KASTURI Prasanthi Nilayam, 21 Apr. 1968 CONTENTS 01. Upanishad Vahini nnn1 02. Isavasyopanishad nnn9 03. Kathopanishad nn17 04. Mundakopanishad nn26 05. Mandukyopanishad nn33 06. Brihadaranyakopanishad nn42 07. Prasnopanishad nn54 08. Kenopanishad nn62 09. Chandogya Upanishad nn70 10. Aithareyopanishad nn79 11. Taittiriyopanishad nn86 12. Brahmanubhava Upanishad nn94 Glossary n104 UPANISHAD VAHINI 1 1 UPANISHAD VAHINI an is essentially Divine. However, he believes himself to be an individual, Mlimited and temporary, because he is entangled in the characteristics of the Five Elements, namely, sound, touch, form, taste and smell. This error brings about joy and grief, good and bad, birth and death. To escape from this association with the elements, to rid oneself of the pulls of their characteristics, is the sign of Liberation, called in Sanskrit as Kaivalya, Moksha or Mukthi. Names may change, but the achievement is the same. While entangled in the five elements, man is attracted, distracted or disappointed by them. All this causes distress. Wealth, possessions—vehicles, buildings—all these are transmutations of the elements. Man craves for them. When he loses them or fails to get hem, he spurns them. 2 UPANISHAD VAHINI Let us take the Five Elements, one by one. The living being has the first one, the Earth, as its base. Water, the second, is the basis for the earth. Water is produced from Fire. The third element, Fire itself emanating from Wind, the fourth. Wind or Vayu arises from Ether, or Akasa. Akasa emerges from the Primal Nature and the Primal Nature is but the manifestation of one aspect of the majesty of God, or the Supreme Sovereign Atma, the Paramatma. Seeking to reach that Paramatma, the source and core of the Universe, the Individual or Jivi, who has entangled himself in the elements, has to overcome, by discrimination and steady practice of detachment, the bonds one by one. Such a person is a Sadhaka. He who wins in this struggle is the Jivanmuktha. “Liberated even while alive.” For the process of such discrimination and for the visualisation of one’s innate reality, one has to study the Upanishads. They are collectively called Vedanta. They form the Jnana Kanda of the Vedas, the section that deals with the Higher Wisdom. Liberation from the consequences of Ignorance can be secured only by Knowledge, or Jnana. The Upanishads themselves declare, “Jnaanaad eve thu kaivalyam”; “By Knowledge alone can freedom be won.” UPANISHAD VAHINI 3 The Vedas are reputed to be “three sectioned.” “Kandathrayathmakam”; the three sections being Jnana, Upasana and Karma. These three are found in the Upanishads too. They provided the basis for the Adwaitha, Visishtadwaitha and the Dwaitha systems of Philosophy too. The name Upanishad denotes the study and practice of the innate truth: the name, Brahma Vidya, denotes the supremacy of spiritual contemplation. The name, Yogasastra, denotes the mental churning that brings success. What is the fundamental activity which is required of man? What is the basic thing to be known? It is only one’s basic reality. The Upanishads describe the various stages and the various modes of this search for realising this. The name is full of significance. Upa means the process of studying with Nishta or steadfastness. Shad means the attainment of the Ultimate Reality. The name Upa-ni-shad arose for these reasons. The Upanishads teach not only the principles of Atma Vidya. They instruct the practical means of realisation also. They point out not only the duties and obligations one has to bear, but also the actions to be done and those to be avoided. The Gita is but the essence of the Upanishads. Arjuna acquired, by the lessons of the Gita, the fruit of listening to the Upanishads. In the Upanishads, the 4 UPANISHAD VAHINI statement, “Thath-thwam-asi,” “That thou art,” is found. In the Gita, Krishna says to Arjuna, “I am Arjuna among the Pandavas,” that is to say. “I and You are the same.” This is the same as saying “Thou art That,” that Jiva and Easwara (God) are the same. So, whether it is the Gita or the Upanishads, the teaching is Non-duality, not Duality or qualified Monism. The human eye cannot delve into the microcosm or the macrocosm. It cannot read the mystery of the virus or the atom or the stellar universe. Therefore, scientists supplement the eye with the telescope and the microscope. Similarly, sages are able to experience Divinity through the eye of knowledge, gained by following the Dharma of moral conduct and spiritual discipline. When the human eye stands in need of an extraneous instrument to observe even the insignificant worm and virus, how can man refuse to go through the process of manthra when he desires to see the omnipresent transcendent Principle? It is very hard to acquire the eye of wisdom. Concentration is essential for this. And for concentration to develop and stabilise itself, three things are very important: purity of consciousness, moral awareness and spiritual discrimination. These qualifications are difficult of attainment, to ordinary folk. UPANISHAD VAHINI 5 Man is endowed with the special instrument of discrimination, of judgement, of analysis and synthesis, which among all animals he alone possesses. He has to develop this and utilise it to the best purpose. Through this instrument he can realise the Immanent Divinity. Instead, man pesters himself and others with the question: Where does God reside? If He is real, why is He not seen? Hearing such queries, one feels like pitying the poor questioners. For, they are announcing their own foolishness. They are like the dullards who aspire for university degrees, without taking pains even to learn the alphabet. They aspire to realise God without putting themselves to the trouble of the Sadhana (spiritual discipline) required. People who have no moral strength and purity, talk of God and His existence and decry efforts to see Him. Such people have no right to be heard. Spiritual Sadhana is based on the holy Sastras. They cannot be mastered in a trice. They cannot be followed through talk. Their message is summed up in the Upanishads; hence, they are revered as authoritative. They are not the products of human intelligence. They are the whisperings of God to man. They are parts of the eternal Vedas. The Vedas shine gloriously through all their parts. The Upanishads are authentic and authoritative, as they share the glory of the Vedas. They are 1180 in number; but through the centuries, many of them disappeared from human memory and only 108 have 6 UPANISHAD VAHINI now survived. Of these 10 have attained great popularity, as a result of the depth and value of their contents. The sage Vyasa classified the Upanishads and allotted them among the four Vedas. The Rig Veda has twenty-one branches and each branch has one Upanishad allotted to it. The Yajur Veda has 109 branches and 109 Upanishads. The Atharvana Veda has fifty branches and fifty Upanishads were its share. The Sama Veda has a thousand branches and the balance, namely, 1000 Upanishads were its share.
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  • Brahma Sutra

    Brahma Sutra

    BRAHMA SUTRA CHAPTER 1 1st Pada 1st Adikaranam to 11th Adhikaranam Sutra 1 to 31 INDEX S. No. Topic Pages Topic No Sutra No Summary 5 Introduction of Brahma Sutra 6 1 Jijnasa adhikaranam 1 a) Sutra 1 103 1 1 2 Janmady adhikaranam 2 a) Sutra 2 132 2 2 3 Sastrayonitv adhikaranam 3 a) Sutra 3 133 3 3 4 Samanvay adhikaranam 4 a) Sutra 4 204 4 4 5 Ikshatyadyadhikaranam: (Sutras 5-11) 5 a) Sutra 5 324 5 5 b) Sutra 6 353 5 6 c) Sutra 7 357 5 7 d) Sutra 8 362 5 8 e) Sutra 9 369 5 9 f) Sutra 10 372 5 10 g) Sutra 11 376 5 11 2 S. No. Topic Pages Topic No Sutra No 6 Anandamayadhikaranam: (Sutras 12-19) 6 a) Sutra 12 382 6 12 b) Sutra 13 394 6 13 c) Sutra 14 397 6 14 d) Sutra 15 407 6 15 e) Sutra 16 411 6 16 f) Sutra 17 414 6 17 g) Sutra 18 416 6 18 h) Sutra 19 425 6 19 7 Antaradhikaranam: (Sutras 20-21) 7 a) Sutra 20 436 7 20 b) Sutra 21 448 7 21 8 Akasadhikaranam : 8 a) Sutra 22 460 8 22 9 Pranadhikaranam : 9 a) Sutra 23 472 9 23 3 S. No. Topic Pages Topic No Sutra No 10 Jyotischaranadhikaranam : (Sutras 24-27) 10 a) Sutra 24 486 10 24 b) Sutra 25 508 10 25 c) Sutra 26 513 10 26 d) Sutra 27 517 10 27 11 Pratardanadhikaranam: (Sutras 28-31) 11 a) Sutra 28 526 11 28 b) Sutra 29 538 11 29 c) Sutra 30 546 11 30 d) Sutra 31 558 11 31 4 SUMMARY Brahma Sutra Bhasyam Topics - 191 Chapter – 1 Chapter – 2 Chapter – 3 Chapter – 4 Samanvaya – Avirodha – non – Sadhana – spiritual reconciliation through Phala – result contradiction practice proper interpretation Topics - 39 Topics - 47 Topics - 67 Topics 38 Sections Topics Sections Topics Sections Topics Sections Topics 1 11 1 13 1 06 1 14 2 07 2 08 2 08 2 11 3 13 3 17 3 36 3 06 4 08 4 09 4 17 4 07 5 Lecture – 01 Puja: • Gratitude to lord for completion of Upanishad course (last Chandogya Upanishad + Brihadaranyaka Upanishad).